Oxidation degree or sheet size: What really matters for the photothermal effect and ecotoxicity of graphene oxide?

[Display omitted] •A straight correlation exists between photothermal effect and ecotoxicity of GO.•The photothermal effect is stronger in more oxidized GO.•Aqueous suspensions of carboxylated GO samples can reach 80 °C under NIR.•GO sheets larger than 200 nm delay hatching of zebrafish embryos.•GO...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inFlatChem Vol. 26; p. 100231
Main Authors Moreira, Caio C.C., Costa, Ítalo A., Moura, Diego S., Grisolia, Cesar K., Leite, Carlos A.E.M., Souza, Paulo Eduardo N., Moreira, Sanclayton G.C., Pereira-da-Silva, Marcelo A., Braga, Jez W.B., Paterno, Leonardo G.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Elsevier B.V 01.03.2021
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Summary:[Display omitted] •A straight correlation exists between photothermal effect and ecotoxicity of GO.•The photothermal effect is stronger in more oxidized GO.•Aqueous suspensions of carboxylated GO samples can reach 80 °C under NIR.•GO sheets larger than 200 nm delay hatching of zebrafish embryos.•GO ecotoxicity is more physical than chemical. A set of thirteen GO samples obtained following different methodologies and described by eight structural parameters – hydrodynamic diameter (658 nm–142 nm), size polydispersity index, optical absorption coefficient, lambda maximum, D/G peak intensity ratio, crystallite size, distance between defects, and pH – was submitted to NIR 808 nm irradiation (experiment 1) and fish embryo toxicity (FET) test performed with zebrafish embryos (experiment 2). Principal component analysis (PCA) applied to the obtained data shows that the optical absorption coefficient and lambda maximum, which are strongly dependent on the GO oxidation degree and presence of carboxylic acid groups, are the most relevant features for the photothermal effect. Conversely, size is the predominant parameter for the ecotoxicity. Only samples exhibiting the smallest sheet size (below 200 nm) do not interfere either on the hatching time or the rate of alive hatched individuals. GO samples composed of larger sheets, regardless their oxidation and carboxylation degrees, impart negative effects to the embryo’s development stages, including hatching delay, death of embryos and abnormalities on hatched individuals. It is therefore concluded that the photothermal effect is more dependent on the oxidation degree, whereas ecotoxicity is more dependent on the size of GO sheets.
ISSN:2452-2627
2452-2627
DOI:10.1016/j.flatc.2021.100231